Description: AI Development and the Fuzzy Logic' of Chinese Cyber Security and Data Laws by Max Parasol This book explains the rapid rise of Chinas innovation system and provides a roadmap for the prospects of Chinas AI development, within the bounds of Chinas data laws. It will appeal to lawyers, policymakers, venture capitalists, entrepreneurs, the global technology industry as well as those interested in Chinas entrepreneurial ecosystem. FORMAT Paperback CONDITION Brand New Publisher Description The book examines the extent to which Chinese cyber and network security laws and policies act as a constraint on the emergence of Chinese entrepreneurialism and innovation. Specifically, how the contradictions and tensions between data localisation laws (as part of Network Sovereignty policies) affect innovation in artificial intelligence (AI). The book surveys the globalised R&D networks, and how the increasing use of open-source platforms by leading Chinese AI firms during 2017–2020, exacerbated the apparent contradiction between Network Sovereignty and Chinese innovation. The drafting of the Cyber Security Law did not anticipate the changing nature of globalised AI innovation. It is argued that the deliberate deployment of what the book refers to as fuzzy logic in drafting the Cyber Security Law allowed regulators to subsequently interpret key terms regarding data in that Law in a fluid and flexible fashion to benefit Chinese innovation. Author Biography Max Parasol is a Research Fellow at UNSW Sydney, researching FinTech. He is a qualified lawyer with extensive experience working in Private Equity. He completed a PhD from the University of Technology Sydney on the Chinese AI ecosystem. Previously he practised as a lawyer in Shanghai, Western Australia, and Victoria and completed a masters degree at Nanjing University/Johns Hopkins University in Chinese. As a Senior Fellow at Monash University, he created a unit about Chinas innovation ecosystem. He studied, researched and worked in China for more than five years and speaks, reads and writes Chinese. Table of Contents Part I. Historical and Doctrinal Background: 1. Innovating in chinas entrepreneurial ecosystem; 2. The extent of fuzzy logic: the tech giants and their illegal legal structure; 3. Chinas cyber policies: conflict between innovation and restriction; 4. Chinas data security policies leading to the cyber security law; 5. The cyber security law: fuzzy logic in a touchstone law; Part II. Impact on Artificial Intelligence: 6. the impacts of data localisation on globalised ecosystems and Chinese tech development; 7. How fuzzy provisions in the cyber security law protect data but not data privacy: data protection shall not hinder AI; 8. Why the current state of AI research is perfectly suited to Chinas fuzzy logic system; 9. Open-source Ai platforms and the cyber security law; Conclusion — effect of data localisation on Chinese AI innovation. Review In examining fuzzy logic in Chinas Cyber Security Law, this book provides invaluable insights into how China can be a powerful force in AI and tech innovation. It will have a significant impact on the way in which we conceive of technology regulation in China and elsewhere. Andrew Godwin, Melbourne Law School, The University of MelbourneAs China navigates tensions between state control and the imperatives of innovation in internet technology, this book offers timely insights. It digs deeply into the fuzzy logic of rules on data localisation, and frames a compelling argument that will help shape scholarly and policy debates in coming years. Adam K Webb, Co-Director and Professor of Political Science, Hopkins-Nanjing CenterThe Chinese tech scene presents us with a bewildering picture of deeply intertwined technological, political and commercial questions and interests. This complexity equally affects Chinese policymaking, particularly in fields related to data and artificial intelligence. This volume aims to enlighten the way by which China gropes its way forward carefully, but decisively. Rogier Creemers, Assistant Professor, Leiden UniversityParasol brings ground-up observations of how Chinas tech ecosystem really works, and skillfully integrates those with important insights from academia and beyond. He cuts right through the tired debates about whether China can innovate, and deftly illustrates how the fuzzy logic of Chinese tech policy is enabling local experimentation that drives the ecosystem forward. Parasols book provides excellent intellectual scaffolding for those of us trying to make sense of how Chinese tech got where it is today, and where its going next. Matt Sheehan, Fellow, The Paulson Institutea timely, insightful and well-researched contribution to the literature on China and technology … Parasols fascinating book is likely to find its way onto postgraduate reading lists and presents ideas and hypotheses that can be tested and expanded in future scholarship. Tim Stevens, The China Quarterly Promotional Explains the rapid rise of Chinas innovation system and provides a roadmap for the prospects of Chinas AI development. Details ISBN100907363X Author Max Parasol Pages 422 Publisher Cambridge University Press Year 2023 ISBN-10 100907363X ISBN-13 9781009073639 Publication Date 2023-03-09 UK Release Date 2023-03-09 Format Paperback Imprint Cambridge University Press Place of Publication Cambridge Country of Publication United Kingdom Illustrations Worked examples or Exercises AU Release Date 2023-03-09 NZ Release Date 2023-03-09 Alternative 9781009064804 DEWEY 343.510999 Audience Tertiary & Higher Education We've got this At The Nile, if you're looking for it, we've got it. With fast shipping, low prices, friendly service and well over a million items - you're bound to find what you want, at a price you'll love! TheNile_Item_ID:141132501;
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